UNMC Students Prepare for Humanitarian Medical Mission in Jamaica

Spring break is already on the minds of some students from the University

of Nebraska Medical Center. They are preparing early for their spring break

in Jamaica. But they won’t be laying on the beach. They’ll be working more

than 10 hours a day providing medical care to the poor.

The UNMC Student Alliance for Global Health is busy looking for donations

of medication, toiletries and summer clothing to take on its ninth humanitarian

medical mission, March 14-20, to Falmouth, Jamaica. Falmouth is a poor,

medically-underserved city of about 10,000 located about 20 miles east

of Montego Bay. Only one physician serves the area, said Sheilah Bush,

UNMC medical student and coordinator of the mission.

Twenty-eight students from UNMC’s College of Medicine and College of

Dentistry, along with three Nebraska physicians, two dentists and one nurse,

will see about 90 patients a day, said Bush. They will treat patients for

a variety of illnesses, do health screenings, perform minor surgery and

dental procedures in small, four-room clinic.

“There is no fancy MRIs (magnetic resonance imaging), CT scans or even

X-ray,” said Wes Smeal, a second-year medical student from Howells, Neb.

“We really get to experience the practice of medicine.”

The group of 34 will work during the day then hold education sessions

in the evenings to share what the students learned during the day. While

in Jamaica, some of the students will provide health screenings and medical

care at the Girls Home of Safety, a resident of about 75 mostly orphaned,

school-age girls.

“The experience we get is very rewarding,” Smeal said. “The people there

are very appreciative. By the end of the week, people are in lines for

hours to see us, many times well before we’re there in the morning.”

Smeal and Bush, who participated in the mission last year, said the

student group is looking for donations of pharmaceuticals, especially antibiotics,

pain relievers, and diabetes medications. The students also are collecting

toiletries such as toothbrushes and toothpaste, as well as shampoo and

soap and new and used summer clothing for children, ages five to 18.

Clothing and toiletries can be dropped off anytime at the Phi Chi house,

3708 Dewey Ave. To make other donations, call the Student Alliance for

Global Health at 344-4715.

UNMC is the only public academic health science center in the state.

Through its commitment to research, education and patient care, UNMC has

established itself as one of the country’s leading centers for cancer research

and treatment and solid organ transplantation.  More than $34 million

in research grants and contracts are awarded to UNMC scientists annually. 

In addition, UNMC’s educational programs are responsible for training more

health professionals practicing in Nebraska than any other institution.


 

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